[leg-uh-see]
–noun, plural leg•a•cies
2. anything handed down from the past, as from an ancestor or predecessor: the legacy of ancient Rome.
I was the spawn of an anarchist and a machine gun. She was lawless, it was a harbinger of the inevitable. And I was left where the road forks—evil without intention, evil just because. Goodness, goodness was never a choice for me. Manslaughter was mine by birthright, it was all my malcontent firearm left behind. I wanted love, I couldn't have it. And that's when the murder spree began. And I was unlawful all the time. And it's so heavy to have my birthday be a roman holiday. Oh, what a legacy.